Shell Has More Gardai Protecting It than Most Counties

Information from written Dáil answer proves An Garda Síochána treats Shell better than the citizens of Ireland

A written reply to a Dáil question by Aengus Ó Snodaigh by justice minister Dermot Ahern shows that Garda personnel strength in a large majority of Irish counties is less than the number of Gardai deployed in Erris to protect Shell's interests. For example, Shell has more cops than Co. Clare, Co. Kerry, or Co Sligo. Shell also has more cops defending its corrupt Corrib Gas Project than there are Gardai 'defending' the citizens of Galway, Waterford or Dún Laoghaire.

About 1 in every 35 Gardai working in the state are on Shell duty, just like these

On the 9th of June 2009, justice minister Dermot Ahern gave a written reply to Sinn Féin TD Aengus Ó Snodaigh outlining the current personnel strength of An Garda Síochána by Garda district. From this comprehensive, detailed and up-to-date statement of Garda numbers it is possible to construct reliable estimates of Garda personnel strength by county, and for many of the cities in the Republic of Ireland.

According to the minister's written answer, there are 29 Gardai deployed in the Belmullet Garda district, the district that includes all the area directly affected by the Corrib Gas Project. There is little or no reported crime in this district other than the 'crime' of protesting against Shell's destruction of the local community and environment and the Great /gas Robbery. Therefore, one can reasonably assume that all the Gardai stationed in this district are on Shell duty. To this one can easily add another estimated minimum of 21 Gardai from adjacent Garda divisions that are regularly deployed in Erris to police the ongoing protests against Shell's project works. Then, if one includes the widely-reported 300 (admitted minimum) Gardai drafted in to protect the current phase of the project works in Glengad, then one can say with certainty that there is a conservative minimum of 350 Gardai in Erris defending Shell's interests this week. For the purposes of brevity, we will refer to Shell's Garda personnel strength as 'Co. Shell' in the table below and elsewhere in the article, and we will only give the counties, Garda divisions and districts where the current garda force strength is less than that currently deployed in Co. Shell.

It would also be a useful to see how the total given by the minister in his written answer compares to the claimed personnel strength (sworn members) of An Garda Síochána in its annual report of 2008, and also with the projected total Garda personnel strength for end 2009 given in a statement by the justice minister to Dáil Éireann on April 22 this year.

The difference between figure 1 and those in figures 2 and 3 can be explained by figure 1 being the current operational strength of the force on June 9th of this year and the other two figures being the total strength of the force including those on various types of leave and those suspended from duty etc. In any case it can readily be seen that the Garda deployment to Co. Shell is a non-trivial proportion of either the current operational strength of the force or total Garda numbers.

These conservative figures would suggest that something close to one in every forty of all Gardai in the state are on Shell duty here in Erris. The percentage yielded by figure 1 indicates that close to one in every thirty-five Gardai currently operationally active in the state are here protecting Shell's interests.

It is worth repeating again that the estimate of the Co. Shell Garda deployment is on the low side, based on conservative local estimates of the deployment in Erris and the figure given widely in the mainstream media for the extra Garda deployment in Co. Shell for this period. The true figure, overall percentage and proportion could be much higher, and this figure may never be revealed to the public. This also doesn't include the 85 Irish naval service personnel deployed here on fully one-quarter of the navy's flotilla.

This disproportionate response to local protest and the Shell to Sea effort to stop the pipe-laying works in Broadhaven Bay starkly illustrates the skewed priorities of the Irish state and its security apparatus. For the state to deploy more Gardai in the protection of an oil multinational's interests than it is prepared to deploy in most Irish counties (and some of its cities) to 'protect' the citizenry shows how little the powers-that-be care for the safety of citizens and how much they care for the interests of rapacious and murderous energy corporations like Shell.

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Add the Navy to these figures and the public servants that are doing the dirty work for Shell and the government and we have a nice little bill for the tax payer.
WHY NOT APPLY TO THE EU FOR A CHANGE OF NAME FOR THIS COUNTRY, HOW DOES SHELLEIRE SOUND.

Aside from the fact that the gards are protecting the wholesale robbery of the people, it's a great day for the smalltime burglars, car thieves, gangsters, fraudsters, etc., to operate, knowing how many gards are off at the seaside.

My partner, along with three other women, in seperate incidents, was viciously attacked on the same night, by coked up youths not far from the Rotunda, where a woman who was attacked last week died the other day.

There is a dearth of cops on the beat in Dublin, I thought a few weeks back there was so few of them around that the blue flu must be back on, on the QT.